The house of Karl Lagerfeld returned to Pitti this season, after a half-decade hiatus, unspooling its fashion universe and staging a great concert by Victor Ray.
The mood was ebullient, busy and unexpected at its installation, and no wonder. While many fashion brands have been buffeted this past year by the Chinese market and global concerns, the house of Karl Lagerfeld is booming.
According to its energetic CEO Pier Paolo Righi the brand grew revenues by 9% last year, even while many rival suffered downturns.
The house does not release figures for annual turnover, though market sources indicate that Karl Lagerfeld has comfortably passed the half billion-euro target.
Besides a powerful debut for its new Karl Lagerfeld Jeans line, the brand has been expanding both geographically with a slew of new stores in Latin America and vertically. A new deal will see a 61-story Karl Lagerfeld Hotel & Residences tower open in Malaysia.
So, FashionNetwork.com sat down with Righi, a lean, hard-charging, Italo-German polyglot for an update on a house which has never looked in better shape five years after the remarkable and towering figure of Lagerfeld passed away.
Fashion Network: Why have you decided to return to Pitti this season?
Pier Paolo Righi: Remarkably, it was a decision we took just before Christmas – last minute. We haven’t been there in over five years. But we thought, let’s show the brand in its entirety. Provide a full focus on the DNA.
So, we said, ‘Pitti in January, Pitti in four weeks. Let’s got for it!’ And the organizers were very receptive. It just felt like a good moment, when the market and world is challenged to go to Pitti with confidence and spread positivity. Everyone is waiting and watching – so it’s good to have a clear point of view. And we have been very busy and getting lots of positive credit being here.
FN: What message do you want to send out about the brand?
PPR: Showing all our different phases but with one voice. We have made a lot of progress and clearly developed Karl Lagerfeld across lots of collections. It’s good to put it all together here.
FN: Why is this the moment for an immersive experience?
PPR: That comes from our live act – Victor Ray. Karl was not just about fashion but about artists and talented people creating joint moments. Fashion is a vehicle to do that, so having Victor is a great fully immersive moment.
FN: Why were you keen to work with Victor Ray?
PPR: We worked with him in some events in Berlin and he caught the attention of the crowd in a heartbeat! Victor resonates as a young and upcoming talent, which Karl would have liked. He is a great ambassador.
Of course, we also work with Sébastien Jondeau and Amber Valletta as friends of house and family, and now also with Calum Harper, a creator on TikTok. We want to keep a family venture and link back to Karl’s life and work. Or with people he would have chosen if he were round today.
FN: What new collabs’ have you in the pipeline?
PPR: Less co-branding and more residential hospitality, with several coming up. Though our best new venture is Karl Lagerfeld Jeans. Business doubled last year! We created a separate design team under leadership of our creative director Hun Kim, based in Amsterdam. Karl wore jeans a lot and it’s a product that comes naturally to us. We wanted to express his love of black and white denim; skinny jeans for boys and girls, and a certain gender fluidity.
We distribute the line differently in a different store concept. Karl Lagerfeld Jeans opened its first store in Madrid about a year ago. And there are more franchise stores for jeans coming, and we will include jeans in our flagships like Regent Street. Plus, its price position is more accessible – jeans sell for between 120 to 190 euros – about 25% less than the main line. It also gave us the possibility to further evolve the main line in terms of aesthetics and sophistication and allow jeans to be quirkier. I think that Karl could like most of these jeans and I think he would wear them!
FN: How has the TV Series ‘Becoming Karl Lagerfeld’ affected the brand?
PPR: It has had a positive impact, hard to say how much, but certainly driven attention to the brand. And resonated importantly with a younger audience and reminded them of Karl’s story, and his emergence in the 1960s and 70s. We saw that clicks and searches rose rapidly.
FN: Karl had incredible commercial success with both Chanel and Fendi, though his own brand was sometimes more a succès d’estime. Personally, I wrote three stories over three decades about it being sold, starting back in the 80s when the numbers were not good. What have been the key secrets of turning the house into a profitable label?
PPR: It all comes back to one of my first conversations with Karl. He had two major points. He said that ‘when I worked for Chanel and Fendi, I must interpret their brand. This house must be my own personal taste.’ And two, he said ‘I want to make the brand accessible – and include people.’ So, to differentiate ourselves, the key was to make people feel welcome in the world of Karl.
FN: Most fashion brands have suffered revenue downturns in the past two years. How has KL fared?
PPR: It has been a challenging market environment. However, the way we are positioned ourselves and given access is paying divined. Last year we grew 9% in annual revenues. We don’t release exact sales figures, but I can say that in terms of consumer sales including licenses, the brand globally does 1.5 billion euros annually.
The key drivers have been jeans and digital. As the global notoriety of Karl Lagerfeld means we can play on the global market. Digital is solid double-digit growth, and now 30% of all sales. Even if the margins are not a whole lot better than bricks and mortar.
Plus, new geographies like Latin America, where we have opened franchise stores in places like Guatemala, Ecuador or Mexico. Six this year, and eight more in Latin America in 2025.
And we continue to be very active in hospitality. Our first Karl Lagerfeld gate community in Spain will open at the end of this year. While in Dubai, we are developing a community of 50 villas. We work with One Atelier, an architectural group based in Milano, that develops the look of whole buildings and includes a Karl Lagerfeld furniture line. The exact look depends on the project. In Dubai, it’s a very brilliant contemporary execution that took inspiration from Karl’s office in rue St Guillaume. I call it Haussmann for the 21st century! Over in Macao we opened the luxurious Karl Lagerfeld Hotel, and its design has won prizes.
And, in Malaysia, we are creating a landmark dual use Karl Lagerfeld Hotel and Residences in a 61-story tower in Malacca, to open in 2030. Each of these deals are a blend of design project and a brand license, meaning renewing revenues. It all gives the brand a different dimension – not just apparel, but a living experience. That is what people see when they consider the brand.
FN: I have read Karl founded his own house in 1984; and described its concept as “intellectual sexiness.” What is your definition of the Karl Lagerfeld DNA?
PPR: I like that! I would say today in one sentence – be who you want to be. It’s about including everybody and empowering them to express themselves in who they want to be.
FN: What is your weekly routine?
PPR: I commute between Munich, Amsterdam and Paris. Every month I travel somewhere, whether Asia or the U.S., where the G-III Apparel Group is based. It has owned the brand for three years. We knew them before as they had 20% of the brand before. Now, they own 100%. We work very well with its CEO Maurice Goldfarb. He is with Warren Buffet the longest standing CEO of a listed company. His father founded the company and it’s listed but it operates with very entrepreneurial values, which resonates with me a lot.
FN: What would Karl think of his marque were he alive today? PPR: His one-time driving principle – embrace the present and invent the future. He would say we are continuing that mantra. What would he feel? He once expressed it when he was alive. He came every year to our year-end Christmas party in Paris – 20 people at first and 600 people in Amsterdam at the end. And I recall him telling me, ‘I always like to come to your parties as I see so many smiling faces and so much positivity.’ And that’s the biggest compliment to me. And he would feel that again today, when, including stores, we are nearly 1,000 people.
Iceberg Jeans, the iconic streetwear line by Italian label Iceberg, is back. Under creative director James Long, the Iceberg Jeans line embodies a vibrant state of mind: fun, inclusive, contemporary, and accessible. Besides denim, the new collection includes outerwear, knitwear, tailored items, casual wear and accessories.
“I’ve always wanted to give Iceberg Jeans a new lease of life,” said Long, the creative director at Iceberg. “The brand has a unique energy, and like everything that Iceberg represents, it’s always about looking to the future with optimism. I love these designs, and I hope that others too will appreciate them and make them part of their everyday lives.”
Iceberg Jeans debuted in 1986, soon emerging as a bold brand bringing Italian design, with its mix of playfulness and wearability, to the world. Its success was fuelled by word of mouth, and by campaigns that have become pop culture icons, featuring celebrities such as Lil’ Kim and Paris Hilton. The new collection refreshes the positive essence of Iceberg Jeans’s heritage while looking to the future. The Iceberg Jeans Fall 2025 collection will be available at selected wholesale partners, Iceberg stores and online from June 2025.
Experimentation and innovation were the name of the game on the last day of Paris Haute Couture Week. Emerging couturiers took centre stage on Thursday, like Peet Dullaert, 35, from the Netherlands, and Miss Sohee, 28, from Korea. The latter staged her maiden couture week show, as a guest on the event’s official calendar. Dullaert and Miss Sohee unveiled Spring/Summer 2025 collections characterised by contrasting styles.
Dullaert, a Paris-based Dutch designer, showed for the first time at Paris Haute Couture Week exactly a year ago. In his third Parisian show, he juxtaposed glamourous looks with more everyday ones, like the suits and trousers sets or the black tweed maxi coat, worn back-to-front with the cuffs, pockets and buttons at the rear, which could morph into an evening dress if needed.
Dullaert’s couture looks were made from bodysuits and playsuits in tight stretch fabric, on which he added long, sheer flared skirts decorated with geometric patterns embroidered with gems, or made with swathes of silk draped directly on the body, giving the models real freedom of movement. The feeling of freedom was heightened by the use of a wrinkled high-performance fabric developed by the label.
Other looks were covered with thin tassels lined with sequins, or with crystals, with draped white and black tulle, taffeta and other glimmering silks. Dullaert’s looks were characterised by flowing volumes and silhouettes, but he didn’t shy away from intervening decisively in the garments’ construction, for example baring a shoulder or cutting his dresses with long slits along the legs.
The couture show by Miss Sohee, real name Sohee Park, was eagerly awaited. The London-based Korean designer showed twice before in Paris, and was a hit on the Milanese runways in February 2022, backed by Dolce & Gabbana. She pulled out all the stops in Paris, immersing her guests in a magical universe where eras and bold silhouettes mixed spectacularly, showcased inside the gilded halls and under the majestic chandeliers of the Pozzo di Borgo palace.
Miss Sohee’s ladies seemed to be ready for a grand ball with their shimmering, vibrantly coloured crinoline dresses, satin sheath dresses glittering with pearls, and statement coats whose long trains were ornamented with embroidered bucolic scenes, like a golden peacock or floral branches, rich in crystals and sequins. Looks worthy of the Venice Carnival.
Botticelli’s Venus seemed to have inspired Miss Sohee, scallops and seashells being among the key elements in her collection. A large shell rose like a fan at the back of a corset which extended into a long, faded-pink silk skirt. Elsewhere, shells encased the hips in two short bustier dresses in python and crocodile-effect leather, or added length to a bustier entirely decorated with gems that was sewn onto a tulle top dotted with mother-of-pearl drops.
Shells embroidered in small patterns featured on a silk duchesse dress, and more shells in silver pleated fabric turned into a micro hooded jacket over a Fantômas-style black velvet jumpsuit, with a double row of white pearls draped around the waist.
Nothing seemed too precious and extravagant for Miss Sohee’s ladies, who also wore more contemporary outfits consisting of lace jumpsuits, miniskirts and laced thigh-high boots. Park founded her label in 2020, after studying at Central Saint Martins in London, and her customers include scores of celebrities, among them names like Cardi B. and Bella Hadid.
All hail physical retail. The demise of the high street store predicted in the early pandemic period was wide of the mark as a near nine out of 10 of Britons visited a retail destination during October and November.
In fact, 88% now shop in-store, an amazing increase of 86.1% since last May. And it’s been heavily influenced by workers increasingly returning to city and town centre offices as well as consumers aged under 35.
That’s according the the latest Consumer Pulse Report by MRI Software/Retail Economics showing “high streets remain the lifeblood of the retail ecosystem”, leading in visitor frequency with an average of 2.2 visits per person per month “reinforcing their importance as destinations that bring people together.”
The survey reveals that 31% of office workers play a key role in high street retail, with visits peaking during lunch hours while 33% of themchoose to visit after 5pm on weekdays, particularly Tuesdays and Wednesdays which have become the popular days to venture into the office.
“As return to office becomes more widespread, the retail sector has an opportunity to maximise engagement and sales by leveraging these insights and presenting itself as a convenient shopping option for the hybrid workforce”, the report highlights.
Working from home is increasingly becoming a non-starter for many businesses with regular news stories about major companies insisting that their staff returned to the office full-time or at least three or four days a week.
Further, the under-35 demographic is increasingly motivated by experiential retail opportunities.
In November, this age group averaged 9.5 visits to physical retail destinations, more than double the frequency of those aged 55 and over.
Interestingly, the rise of social commerce, which enables shoppers to make purchases within social media apps such as TikTok and Instagram, “is likely influencing footfall into physical retail destinations and creating opportunities for in-store experiences”, the study claims.
Jenni Matthews, marketing & insights director, MRI Software, said: “The latest findings depict a retail sector that continues to adapt and remain relevant as consumer behaviours shift.
“With 88% of the UK population visiting retail destinations and under-35s driving experiential trends, it’s clear that physical retail remains a powerful touchpoint for engagement.
“Retailers have an incredible opportunity to leverage these insights, not just to meet consumer expectations, but to exceed them by creating vibrant, immersive destinations that align with changing consumer behaviours.”